Tuesday, October 20, 2009

How a news editor fought for East Germany


There is a very good article in the international edition of De Spiegal magazine in which a 20 something Alexander Osang crossed paths with Fritz Wengler who was temporarily at the helm of the Berliner Zeitung newspaper.

Twenty years ago East Germany was entering its last phase as a Soviet satellite and as Osnag recounts he had been sent me out to report on a torchlight procession by the communist youth group through the city center on the eve of the 40th anniversary of East Germany.

The GDR was going under, and the torchlight procession was the orchestra that continued playing as the Titanic sank.


His article did not show the failing state in the best of lights and he was forced to rewrite it but

cracks had begun appearing in the snow-globe, and the real world began flooding into our building on Alexanderplatz. Tens of thousands of people were fleeing the country, and those who stayed slowly started venturing out onto the streets.


Needless to say when the regime fell Wengler

He wasn't voted out or insulted or called to account in front of some committee. He was simply shunted off into a corner at the newspaper. He remained deputy editor-in-chief, but no-one gave him any work to do.

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